Tensie Whelan

Tensie Whelan joined NYU-Stern in November 2015 as Clinical Professor of Business and Society to lead the school on issues of business and sustainability, driving research and coursework on natural resource-based challenges including climate change, water scarcity, biodiversity loss, poverty and unsustainable development. Professor Whelan was the President of the Rainforest Alliance, where she worked since 2000.

At Rainforest Alliance, she increased the organization’s budget from $4.5 million to $50 million; ensured that 17% of the world’s tea, 14% of the world’s cocoa and 5% of the world’s coffee earned the Rainforest Alliance certification; and increased the Rainforest Alliance seal's visibility from zero to nearly 45%. She led the organization to recruit 4,000 companies and nearly 5 million producers and their families in more than 60 countries.

Professor Whelan has worked in the environmental field for more than 25 years. Her published works include one of the first books on ecofriendly tourism, Nature Tourism: Managing for the Environment. Ethisphere recognized her as one of the “100 Most Influential People in Business Ethics” and the James Beard Foundation awarded her its Leadership Award in 2012. She serves on the advisory boards of Social Accountability International and Corporate Eco Forum, and she is the co-chair of the steering committee of Sustainable Food Lab.

Professor Whelan has also served as the Vice President of Conservation Information at the National Audubon Society, Executive Director of the New York League of Conservation Voters, Managing Editor of Ambio and management consultant to nonprofit organizations such as the Environmental Defense Fund.

She received a B.A. in Politics from New York University and an M.A. in International Communication from American University.

068: Tensie Whelan, part 2: “You’ve got to do what you believe in”

2018-07-22

Tensie and I talked about wine, creating and changing habits, and eating bugs, which happens when you work with the Rainforest Alliance.
We also talk about dealing with people when you change, influencing them, and perspectives that make these things work. The people she influences run multi-billion dollar companies.
Tensie described and lives the point of this podcast: a lifetime of acting on your values, what you care about, not imposing on others, and having fun.
I didn't hear a whisper of guilt, blame, doom, gloom, helplessness, despair, or what many people associate with acting on the environment.
I talk to a lot of people who say that they're doing all they can for the environment---usually people still with a lot of easy changes they'd probably like once they did them.
Despite all she's done, she found something she could work on. However modest, it didn't stop anything else. On the contrary, it led to more---more self-awareness, fun, interacting with others, and leading others.
When you expect the change to improve your life, you find more. Why wouldn't you, as Tensie did?
Read the transcript.

068: Tensie Whelan, part 2: “You’ve got to do what you believe in”

Tensie and I talked about wine, creating and changing habits, and eating bugs, which happens when you work with the Rainforest Alliance.

We also talk about dealing with people when you change, influencing them, and perspectives that make these things work. The people she influences run multi-billion dollar companies.

Tensie described and lives the point of this podcast: a lifetime of acting on your values, what you care about, not imposing on others, and having fun.

I didn't hear a whisper of guilt, blame, doom, gloom, helplessness, despair, or what many people associate with acting on the environment.

I talk to a lot of people who say that they're doing all they can for the environment---usually people still with a lot of easy changes they'd probably like once they did them.

Despite all she's done, she found something she could work on. However modest, it didn't stop anything else. On the contrary, it led to more---more self-awareness, fun, interacting with others, and leading others.

When you expect the change to improve your life, you find more. Why wouldn't you, as Tensie did?

Books/companies/links mentioned

Contact

061: Tensie Whelan, part 1: The Rainforest Alliance, United Nations, and NYU-Stern

2018-07-09

Tensie is helping unravel my preconceived notions of academics focusing more on facts than action.
Maybe because she was President of the Rainforest Alliance. Maybe because I met her when she brought the U.N. Secretary General to NYU. You'll hear other global organizations and people she's influenced, led, and collaborated with in a remarkable and effective career so far.
She brings a new perspective on leading organizations to this podcast, as I've mostly focused on leading people. She shares stories that massive change is possible. She lived it. She talks experience, not just theory.
She also shares practical advice and histories of what worked and what takes more patience since it's not easy. Always dealing with people. Some points you'll hear from her stories:
Effective leadership is rarely, if ever, about being right.
Empathy helps lead people and organizations. You have to understand organizations as you do people to lead them.
It's hard in practice---emotionally, internally. Maintaining integrity while empathizing with people doing things you disagree with.
But if you want change, being effective is more important than venting.
A younger, angrier, less skilled me would only think to protest organizations I disagreed with. As she shares, confrontation is still important, but also to engage and lead.
Hard work is exciting.
Read the transcript.

061: Tensie Whelan, part 1: The Rainforest Alliance, United Nations, and NYU-Stern

Tensie is helping unravel my preconceived notions of academics focusing more on facts than action.

Maybe because she was President of the Rainforest Alliance. Maybe because I met her when she brought the U.N. Secretary General to NYU. You'll hear other global organizations and people she's influenced, led, and collaborated with in a remarkable and effective career so far.

She brings a new perspective on leading organizations to this podcast, as I've mostly focused on leading people. She shares stories that massive change is possible. She lived it. She talks experience, not just theory.

She also shares practical advice and histories of what worked and what takes more patience since it's not easy. Always dealing with people. Some points you'll hear from her stories:

Effective leadership is rarely, if ever, about being right.

Empathy helps lead people and organizations. You have to understand organizations as you do people to lead them.

It's hard in practice---emotionally, internally. Maintaining integrity while empathizing with people doing things you disagree with.

But if you want change, being effective is more important than venting.

A younger, angrier, less skilled me would only think to protest organizations I disagreed with. As she shares, confrontation is still important, but also to engage and lead.

3 responses on “Tensie Whelan”

I post transcripts, but they take a little longer in the production process. You’ll see some past episodes have links to their transcripts. I’ll make a note to tell you when we post Tensie’s transcript, as well as her second conversation.